Colorado Shooting Puzzles Officials
A 17-year-old high school student remained in critical but stable condition Sunday as Colorado officials tried to understand why a fellow student shot her and tried to shoot his debate coach before committing suicide last week.
Two days after the shooting at Arapahoe High School in Centennial, the wounded student, Claire Davis, was in a coma at Littleton Adventist Hospital, her family said in a statement released through the hospital's Facebook page Sunday evening.
Claire may not have been a premeditated target, Arapahoe County Sheriff Grayson Robinson said at a Saturday news conference. She was in "the wrong place at the wrong time" when Karl Halverson Pierson, 18, stalked through the high school with a shotgun Friday, he said.
Posted by on Monday, 16
December 2013
A 17-year-old high school student remained in critical but stable condition Sunday as Colorado officials tried to understand why a fellow student shot her and tried to shoot his debate coach before committing suicide last week.
Two days after the shooting at Arapahoe High School in Centennial, the wounded student, Claire Davis, was in a coma at Littleton Adventist Hospital, her family said in a statement released through the hospital's Facebook page Sunday evening.
"The first responders got Claire to the right place,
at the right time, and the doctors and hospital staff are doing a wonderful job
taking care of her," said the statement, which requested privacy. "We
appreciate your continued good thoughts and prayers, and will provide updates
as her condition improves."
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, in an appearance on
CBS' "Face the Nation" on Sunday, said that a shotgun blast hit
Claire in the face and that he had visited her and her family in the hospital.
"Her parents are two of the most wonderful people
you could ever hope to meet," Hickenlooper said. "You know, they
adopted her. I mean, they are beside themselves, and, really, we all have to
keep Claire in our thoughts and our prayers. Her parents ... I can't imagine
what they're going through. It's unspeakable."
Claire may not have been a premeditated target, Arapahoe County Sheriff Grayson Robinson said at a Saturday news conference. She was in "the wrong place at the wrong time" when Karl Halverson Pierson, 18, stalked through the high school with a shotgun Friday, he said.
The pair didn't appear to interact before Pierson shot
her, Robinson said. Authorities said Pierson unsuccessfully searched the school
for a librarian who had been his debate coach before he set off a Molotov
cocktail that ignited bookshelves in the library and then killed himself.
Robinson told reporters Sunday that investigators had
wrapped up their investigation at the high school and would be releasing the
facility back to the school district soon.
Hickenlooper, a Democrat who pushed successfully for
universal background checks for in-state gun purchases and for limited magazine
sizes, seemed almost at a loss in his "Face the Nation" interview.
Because Pierson was 18, he was able to buy his shotgun
legally; a sheriff's deputy was in the building when the shooting began; and
Pierson didn't exactly stand out among other students as a possible gunman,
Hickenlooper said.
"He didn't seem to have a mental illness. He
had a lot of friends. He was outspoken. There have been a couple stories that
he was bullied, and that's a recurring theme we see sometimes with these
shootings. But, again, there's no rhyme or reason," Hickenlooper said.
He added: "We've invested over $20 million the last
legislative session in mental illness. So we've got, you know, 24/7 hot lines.
We've got mobile crisis centers. We've got 24/7 drop-in centers, really trying
to — to intercept people with mental illness before they can cause damage to
themselves or to others. And — and yet somehow this kid didn't exhibit any of
those symptoms."
A student who was on the debate team with Pierson,
however, said that his friends were concerned about Pierson's behavior.
Larson Ross, 18, a debate team captain, said Pierson had
become angrier since his argument with the debate coach in September.
"It seemed like he was attacking people to try and
elicit a response, and in doing so he would put himself above that person on a
mental level," Ross said. "It started making it tough for a lot of
people to be his friend."
Changes in Pierson were so apparent, Ross said, that his
friends were talking about whether they needed to tell someone that he might be
"going off the edge."
One hour after that discussion, Pierson burst into the
school with a shotgun.
No comments:
Post a Comment